Discrimination In Girl In Translation By Jean Kwok

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In the history of the United States of America, immigration has always been involving racial discrimination, especially towards the Chinese people. From the time when Gold Rush started in the West Coast, the Chinese immigrants were experiencing both physical and verbal offenses from Americans. As the Jean Kwok writes in the book Girl In Translation, the narrator Kimberly and other main characters living as Chinese immigrants indeed profoundly experience all kinds of inconspicuous discrimination in both of their educational path and their careers even though the political policies that directly discriminated the Chinese people have already been alleviated. To begin with, Chinese immigrants were so seriously discriminated from the late 18th century to the mid-19th century …show more content…

In the late 18th century, the Gold Rush brought in many Chinese immigrants that let the US government passed one of the most significant restrictions on free immigration in US history, which is the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1882. At the time when Kimberly and Ma move to America, the discrimination towards Chinese immigrants are not alleviated at all even after the Act was repealed in 1940s that they are treated differently and impartially. When Kimberly experiences her first day of school in America, her confidence is destructed by Mr. Bogart as she explains: "I'd never gotten a zero before, and now everyone thought I was a cheat too" (Kwok 27) that she even skips school. This experience shows how Mr. Bogart's discrimination influences Kim that she can be possibly afraid of going to school in the future, which can completely change her life if she does not continue on all the educations that can help her get out of her bad

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